Visualized: A very young Steve Jobs prepares for television

Back in the late 70’s Steve Jobs wasn’t exactly a household name, but he was important enough to appear on Nightline. The footage after the break is not of the actual interview, Steve’s just getting his microphone and monitor set up, but he’s visibly nervous and seemingly impressed with the technology around him. It’s not exactly news, but it is a very interesting way to spend one minute and thirty-seven seconds on the internet.

[Thanks, GDub]

Continue reading Visualized: A very young Steve Jobs prepares for television

Visualized: A very young Steve Jobs prepares for television originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 09 Feb 2011 21:24:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Why WebOS Hasn’t Lived Up to Its Potential — Yet

When Palm first unveiled webOS in 2009, the new platform was supposed to be the next mobile messiah.

With its sexy user interface, a developer-friendly backend and a host of new features like multitasking and contact Synergy, everyone was certain webOS would be the platform to rejuvenate the once-prominent PDA pioneer company.

Of course, webOS has shaped up to be less of a Jesus than an L. Ron Hubbard, as the platform’s following never rose above cult status.

As of November 2010, Palm’s market share of U.S. mobile platforms weighed in at a paltry 3.9 percent, according to a comScore report. Sales of the Palm Pre — the flagship device on which webOS was first shipped — were lackluster, with numbers never breaking the 1 million mark in the first three months of the phone’s release. Weigh that against the iPhone 3GS, which launched two weeks after the Pre. One million of Apple’s handsets were sold in the first three days after release.

Palm loyalists are praying for a comeback, and may see it at the upcoming invite-only event at Hewlett-Packard’s San Francisco offices Feb. 9.

“The hope is that HP/Palm will be releasing some new smartphone handsets as well as tablets,” says developer Justin Niessner in an interview with Wired.com. “If they fail to deliver, I know quite a few people — including myself — that will be switching to a different mobile OS.”

So what happened? Why did webOS seem so promising and then fall flat on its face?

The Good

The mobile landscape hasn’t always looked so grim for Palm’s platform.

“WebOS introduced a sound development metaphor which had the potential to attract developers,” IDC software analyst Al Hilwa told Wired.com in an interview. “It has a smooth and fluid interface, with good bones like multitasking and a wealth of features, making it a fairly easy platform to develop for.”

Apps for the webOS platform are written primarily in JavaScript and HTML, programming languages used by developers to code for the web. So if you’re already a web developer — and after the early days of the dot-com boom who isn’t? — developing apps for webOS is relatively easy.

“Lots of people who wouldn’t have otherwise created apps flocked to to webOS,” developer Roy Sutton, who runs app development tutorial site webos101.com, told Wired.com in an interview. “They could come in and port over a portion of an existing web app to webOS in a matter of hours.”

Alternatively, developing for Apple’s mobile operating system requires learning its tool chain. That means learning Cocoa Touch, Apple’s proprietary API for building iOS apps.

Another big draw for the developer crowd: “developer mode.” After entering the Konami code while on the Pre’s main idle launch screen, the phone becomes startlingly easy to hack.

“Users can install anything from patches that change core functionality of webOS,” says developer Justin Niessner, “to replacement kernels that enable a user to overclock their WebOS device.”

Additionally, you can access and load “Homebrew” apps, or those still in beta from other developers, onto the Pre. While the Homebrew repertoire consists of a paltry 500+ beta apps, it’s the kind of access that appeals to the hacker sensibility.

Palm Pre users didn’t have to deal with some of the setbacks that Android OS enthusiasts ran into with platform expansion across multiple hardware manufacturers. With Google’s push to update the OS an average of twice yearly since debut, version fragmentation issues have plagued both developers and consumers.

The Bad

Indeed, Palm had attracted lots of positive attention from the tech press at large after the Consumer Electronics Show announcement. While many doted over the sleek look of the new hardware, others (like Wired.com) wagered that webOS would be Palm’s “secret sauce,” the kicker that would set the Pre apart from other 2009 smartphone debuts.

‘It took us six months to see a product. In Silicon Valley time, that’s an eternity.’

But with every advantage webOS had in the veritable mobile platform buffet available to consumers, there were just as many setbacks (if not quite a few more).

“The platform had such tremendous hype and momentum after it was announced at CES 2009,” says Sutton. “But it took us six months to see a product. In Silicon Valley time, that’s an eternity.” The Pre was all but considered vaporware by the time its June 6 launch date came around, only to have its thunder immediately stolen by the iPhone 3GS, which launched shortly thereafter to much consumer ado.

As for the phone itself, some found the Pre’s design lacking. “Palm definitely could have done themselves a favor by releasing some hardware with more modern design cues,” Niessner says. “The screen was smaller than other comparable smart phones on the market. And the slide-out QWERTY keyboard was also very difficult to use.”

Even if you loved the design of the hardware, “The life cycle of the Pre and even the Pre Plus [eventual successor to the Pre] was short,” says developer Peter Ma. ” It couldn’t catch up with the number of iPhones and Android devices coming out after it.”

HTC’s Nexus One, for instance, has a 1-GHz Snapdragon processor (compared to the Pre’s 500 MHz), 512 MB of RAM (to the Pre’s 256 MB) and a 5-megapixel camera (to the Pre’s 3 megapixels) — it’s close to twice the phone that the Pre is. “While the perceived speed of the Palm Pre was acceptable,” Niessner says, “the numbers certainly didn’t do the hardware any favors.”


CE-Oh no he didn’t!: Netgear boss calls ‘game over’ for Microsoft, Jobs’ ‘ego’ reason iPhone doesn’t support Flash

Can’t say that Patrick Lo is a name that immediately rang any bells around here. He’s certainly not as recognizable as Netgear, the company that he chairs and rules supreme. But boy did he hit our radar screens this morning. Lo had plenty of criticism to spread around the Microsoft and Apple camps today during a press lunch in Sydney. Oh where to even begin? Let’s start with Microsoft, and Lo’s claim that, “Microsoft is over — game over, from my point of view,” when comparing Windows Phone 7’s chance to compete with Android and the iPhone. Doubtful, not with Redmond’s Windows 7 and MS Office cash cows fueling Microsoft’s intense desire to execute on its new mobile strategy.

Lo then turned his sights on Apple, having this to say on the topic of Steve Jobs’ refusal to support Adobe Flash on Apple’s mobile devices: “What’s the reason for him to trash Flash? There’s no reason other than ego.” Funny, we thought it was due to performance, security, and power consumption issues. Lo later added, “Once Steve Jobs goes away, which is probably not far away, then Apple will have to make a strategic decision on whether to open up the platform.” Classy. Hit the source link below if you’re just dying to hear how “closed” systems are inferior to “open” systems all over again.

CE-Oh no he didn’t!: Netgear boss calls ‘game over’ for Microsoft, Jobs’ ‘ego’ reason iPhone doesn’t support Flash originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 31 Jan 2011 04:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Steve Jobs Gets Autotuned

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It was bound to happen, right? Sure, we won’t be seeing the real Steve Jobs until he returns from his latest medical leave, but that doesn’t mean that we can’t reflect on some of his greatest moments via the magic of Autotune, right?
Video of Jobs’s iPhone announcement in all of its Autotune glory, after the jump. Just ’cause.

The Best Steve Jobs Tributes

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Steve Jobs may be on a temporary break from the company he helped found back in 1976, but he certainly hasn’t been forgotten. Apple’s ailing CEO will surely go down as one of the most engaging, dynamic, and forward-thinking business executives in modern memory–Jobs’s impact can be gaged by, among other thing, the tributes and parodies he’s inspired all over the pop culture map.
As COO Tim Cook once again grabs the reigns of One Infinite Loop, we’re reminded that, for all of Jobs’s many successes, Cook is probably best off not being his own executive, rather than imitating the man in charge. After all, many have tried, some more successfully than others.
So, as we wish Jobs a healthy recovery, we’d like to take a look at the best, funniest, and just plain most bizarre tributes of the Apple CEO we’ve seen.

Woz “Frightened” By Jobs Leave

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Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak responded to Steve Jobs’s sudden leave from Apple this week in an e-mail, stating, “The news actually frightened me because I did not expect it.”

Jobs over the long weekend issued a release stating that he would be going on leave for an unspecified medical reason, fueling speculation in the media that his pancreatic cancer had returned. The day-to-day running of the company has fallen on Apple COO Tim Cook, who has filled in for Jobs during past medical leaves–and is largely expected to become the company’s next CEO.

Woz said that he had yet to actually reach out to his Apple co-founder, but added that he supports Jobs’s decision. “If Steve is tired and wants a bit more normal life,” Woz said, “more power to him.”

Wozniak and Jobs co-founded Apple Computers with Ronald Wayne in 1976. Wozniak exited the company in 1987, but is still an Apple shareholder–and proud user of Apple products.

Steve Jobs on Leave From Apple, Mystery Abounds

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What could possibly cause a five percent drop in Apple’s share? An absent Steve Jobs, of course. After all, there’s no other executive in tech that so fully personifies the company he runs. When the company dumped Jobs in the mid-80s, after a disagreement with then-CEO John Sculley, the company nearly collapsed.

And then, of course, there’s the fact that Jobs had taken a leave in the past due to cancer–a word that has come up an awful lot in the wake of this weekend’s announcement that he will be taking another temporary creak.

As with last time, COO Tim Cook will be manning the ship. Said Jobs in a statement that went out over the weekend,

At my request, the board of directors has granted me a medical leave of absence so I can focus on my health. I have asked Tim Cook to be responsible for all of Apple’s day to day operations. I have great confidence that Tim and the rest of the executive management team will do a terrific job executing the exciting plans we have in place for 2011,” Jobs continued. “I love Apple so much and hope to be back as soon as I can. In the meantime, my family and I would deeply appreciate respect for our privacy.

Questions surrounding Jobs’s health–and Cook’s seemingly eventual rise to the company’s top position–surfaced again last week, when the COO appeared on stage with Verizon executives to announce the long awaited appearance of the iPhone on that carrier, a role most assumed would have been filed by Jobs.

Love Is Why Apple Needs Steve [Apple]

People talk a lot about what could happen if Steve Jobs leaves for real. Would they be able to keep the momentum? Would Apple collapse? Who could be the new CEO? The answer is right here, in these words: More »

Steve Jobs Taking Medical Leave of Absence From Apple [Apple]

A memo from Steve Jobs was sent to all Apple employees today, stating that Jobs will take a medical leave of absence so that the CEO can “focus on [his] health.” Full details below. More »

Steve Jobs takes medical leave from Apple, Tim Cook taking over daily operations in his absence

That’s all we know for now, folks. Apple’s CEO is taking a medical leave from work, his second in as many years, with Tim Cook filling his role during that time. In an email to the Apple team, Steve Jobs says he’ll be on leave to “focus on [his] health,” though he will retain the position of CEO and will remain involved in the major strategic decisions — Tim Cook will be picking up the slack on day-to-day operations. No further details have been provided, save for Steve expressing his love for Apple and wish to return to his duties as soon as he can. See his email missive in full after the break.

Continue reading Steve Jobs takes medical leave from Apple, Tim Cook taking over daily operations in his absence

Steve Jobs takes medical leave from Apple, Tim Cook taking over daily operations in his absence originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 Jan 2011 08:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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